
Signs:
Jesus, are you home? It's me Mel Gibson.
(Please
scroll to bottom to see what viewers said about my scathing review
of Signs!)
I
saw Signs at the coronet; 10pm; sat 8.3.2. The film has
no structure. It just goes until it stops. It wants either to
be a really good episode of The Twilight Zone or something bigger,
like some grand statement on religion or Christianity. Either
way it doesn't work. As the first, it's too long and ultimately
empty. As the second it's childish and simple-minded.
Certainly,
great films have been made that support, or confirm, a Christian
viewpoint. This film wants to be that, but then portrays God as
some sort of practical joker. Okay, here's what happens. Beware
of spoilers. I mean ***spoilers***.
Gibson
is an ex-clergyman with two kids and younger brother. They live
on a farm in the midwest. About a year before Gibson's wife is
killed in a car accident, at which point Gibson decides there
is no God, or that he hates God because he took his wife (unoriginal?
yes. stupid? yes.).
The
little girl always drinks water and then says it tastes funny,
so there's always tons of glasses of water around. Before Gibson's
wife died she said something about Gibson's brother, an ex-ball
player. Something like "hit it out of the ballpark" or whatever.
Blah,
blah, blah. Aliens come to town. So, Gibson still hates God and
won't pray, but then someone's like, "you gotta have faith man"
and Gibson's like "NO!" He's like, it's all coincidence, not affected
by God!
So
then at the end of the movie, they hear all the creatures have
been wiped out by water. But all of a sudden a creature is in
the living room and is about to kill Gibson's kid, who is unconscious
because he has asthma (yeah, it's a movie, remember) and hasn't
been able to get to his inhaler. Then Gibson sees all the glasses
of water around the house and throws them at the creature. And
then he sees the baseball bat on the wall next to where Joaquin
Phoenix is standing and says to Joaquin the thing his wife said,
"hit away, slugger" or whatever.
So
he does that. And the creature dies. And they take the kid outside,
he had been sprayed by alien creature gas and he might have died
from it! Only thing, he wasn't breathing when he was gassed because
of the asthma. So Gibson's like, wait, wait a minute, now we can
save him!
And
now Gibson rejoins the priesthood (or whatever), because he believes
in God again, because God had to be giving Gibson "signs" about
the water, and the wife's last statement (and other things).
Okay,
SO, God knew that the aliens were coming. He knew it when Gibson's
wife died at the latest. He knew the kid would ALMOST die of asthma
or alien gas. So God knew all this. (Also, doesn't the existence
of space aliens go against the general teachings of Christianity?
I'm not sure.) So, God took away Gibson's wife for a reason, to
end up making Gibson's faith stronger, I guess.
But,
WHY? It would mean that God's upstairs going, Gibson's a good
man. He's spreading my word and all that shit. But, he could be
MORE into me... So God kills Gibson's wife in a random car accident.
He makes sure Gibson is able to talk to his wife before she dies.
He has the wife, as she dies, say the thing about telling his
brother to hit a homer. God has the daughter develop a compulsion
about drinking water, etc. All this elaborate charade to make
someone who is already in the top 1% of devout believers believe
a little more? Will Gibson be able to spread God's word better
or to more people now?
So,
anyway, it's like Shyamalan is trying to say something about spirituality,
but it's very stunted, meaningless, trite and empty. Thus the
pat ending is laughable. By this point, the few good scares, and
moody atmospheric tension stuff is forgotten, because the story
is so stupid.
If
there is a God, why would he design such boring silly parlor games
to amuse himself with? I mean, really according to any organized
religion I know of, God is a recluse. He has no friends. He's
never married, he's a virgin. He's an ego maniac. Then he decides
to make a world (or is it a universe? or is it bigger? and who
made God? right, we all ask that question. And what IS the deal
with God making Jesus and then all of a sudden Jesus is God, and
what happened to the old God? Jesus' father, I mean.)
But,
maybe if Shyamalan's superficial take on Christianity which millions
are seeing, can make people THINK about religion... But will it?
I was already thinking about these things. But will most people
go to the movie to have their vague notions of hopeful immortality
confirmed, and go home?
Disagree
with this review? Then email me at tedstrong@tedstrong.com!
And someone did...
Dateline
November 10:
From: "Roger
Hamilton" (a1950s_guy@hotmail.com)
Date: Sun, 10 Nov 2002 16:11:20 -0500
To: tedstrong@tedstrong.com
Subject: Your Review of Mel Gibson's movie "Signs"
Interestingly,
I used Google to check out various reviews of the Mel Gibson
movie titles "Signs".
And of
all the reviews that I read, your review: Signs: Jesus, are
you home? It's me Mel Gibson. Was the MOST worthless of all--by
a long shot. You cannot even get your facts straight (what facts
you provided): Mel's wife had died 6 months earlier, not a year
earlier, for example.
I cannot
imagine ANY magazine or newspaper paying you for your totally
worthless comments. Were the above not enough, you completely
ruin the movie review by completely giving away the ending.
You need
to remember that there are a lot of people who have not seen
the movie yet, waiting for it to come out on Video and DVD January
3, 2003.
Oh, and
BTW, it was Newsweek, not Time, that called Director Shyamalan
"the next Spielberg". I hope you have another job, as it is
obvious you are a complete failure at movie review.--Roger.
Okay,
so I wrote back to him that my review said that Gibson's wife
had died about a year before. Within the context
of the film, though, I don't think it matters at all that she
died 6 months or 9 months or 12 months before.
Then
he said that I ruin the "movie review" by giving away
the ending. So, I pointed out to him that I wrote (in the second
paragraph): "Beware of spoilers. I mean ***spoilers***."
This is what you are supposed to do if you're going to give away
key plot points or the ending or anything.
Next,
he complained that I said that Time had called Shyamalan
"the next Spielberg". He points out that it was in fact Newsweek.
I then told him that I checked over this review, and my whole
site, for such a reference -- and there wasn't any. Nowhere did
I say that Time, or Newsweek, or my friend Amy called
Shyamalan "the next Spielberg".
Then
I said that I suspected his real problem was that I complained
about the film's being too simplistic and having a childish view
of God, etc. Obviously this fellow loves the film -- who else
would know such trivial details about it -- including the video
and DVD release date!

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